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Children with multiple concussions were found to take longer to recover (Published Sunday, Feb. 2, 2014)

(NECN/NBC News: Erika Edwards) - After a concussion-causing blow, it takes about 12 days for the average child to recover.

But now a new study shows that after a second or third concussion, it takes kids much longer to bounce back.

"Kids who'd had a previous concussion had twice the duration of symptoms of those who hadn't had a previous concussion," said Dr. Matthew Eisenberg of Boston Children's Hospital

Lead study author Eisenberg analyzed nearly 300 young athletes who went to the emergency room with concussion. Symptoms like headache, dizziness, nausea and difficulty concentrating, lasted longer when concussions occurred within a year of each other.

"We think that there's a window of time after the head injury in which the brain is more vulnerable to a second head injury."

It may be that the brain hasn't fully recovered from the original trauma. But the lengthened recovery time may be due to an entirely different reason.

The brain must rest to recover. Doctors routinely tell concussed patients to stay away from school and sports. No texting, no computers and no video games. With each additional concussion, doctors tell patients to rest even more.

But keeping kids contained like that can also lead to headaches and other symptoms that doctors could misinterpret.

"If symptoms that are produced from that process are misinterpreted, as being symptoms from the injury, then the answer is, well keep resting,” said Dr. Jeffrey Kutcher of the University of Michigan Health System. “And what happens? The symptoms keep going on."